James Tompkins

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Father Jimmy (James) Tompkins (September 7, 1870May 4, 1953) was a Roman Catholic priest who integrated the ideals of community economic development and Christian teachings throughout the fishing and mining communities of northern and eastern Nova Scotia, Canada. Tompkins was the spiritual leader of the Antigonish Movement which had an affiliation with St. Francis Xavier University.

Father Tompkins believed in the emancipating power of education and sought to improve economic conditions through study groups and co-operative action. "It is not enough to have ideas, we have to put legs on them," he often said. He started the first regional library in Nova Scotia along with the first credit union and a cooperative housing association in Reserve Mines that was dubbed "Tompkinsville".

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[edit] Brief biography

Jimmy Tompkins was born in Margaree Forks, Nova Scotia, a small farming community on Cape Breton Island. From 1888-1895, he attended St. Francis Xavier University in alternate semesters while teaching there to support himself and went on to Greek and math at the University. He attended the Urban College of the Congregatio de Propaganda Fide (Papal Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith) in Rome from 1897 to 1902. On his return, he continued teaching at St. Francis Xavier University and became the vice-rector in 1907.

Working closely with the Carnegie Corporation, he implemented various reform and modernization programs, culminating in an unsuccessful attempt to amalgamate various sectarian and non-sectarian colleges in the Maritime Provinces into one nondenominational university centered around Dalhousie University in Halifax. Although the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Halifax Edward McCarthy supported amalgamation, the Bishop of Antigonish James Morrison successfully opposed this and eventually exiled Tompkins to the tiny fishing village of Canso, Nova Scotia as parish priest for Canso, Little Dover and Queensport.

As parish priest Tompkins observed firsthand the plight of the poor fishing community there and helped organize and lead what would become the Antigonish Movement of cooperative fisheries, stores, housing projects, and adult study groups. The Antigonish Movement was eventually institutionalized in the form of the Extension Department at St. Francis Xavier, which was headed by Tompkins' double-cousin Father Moses Coady and which included Father (Dr.) Hugh MacPherson, A.B. MacDonald and others.

[edit] Career highlights

[edit] Biographies

  • Jim Lotz and Michael R. Welton, Father Jimmy: Life and Times of Father Jimmy Tompkins (1997), ISBN 1-895415-23-3
  • George Boyle, Father Tompkins of Nova Scotia (1953)

[edit] References

  • The Tompkins Institute for Human Values and Technology [1], Cape Breton University, Sydney, Nova Scotia
  • Father Jimmy Tompkins [2] in Adult Educators You Should Know, National-Louis University
  • Fraught with Wonderful Possibilities: Father Jimmy Tompkins and the Struggle for a Catholic Progressivism, 1902 - 1922, Michael R. Welton, PhD [3]
  • Antigonish Movement [4], Center for Economic Development, Cape Breton University